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Transposition (mathematics) 

In informal language, a transposition is a function that swaps two elements of a set. More formally, given a finite set X=\{a_1,a_2,\ldots,a_n\}, a transposition is a permutation (bijective function of X onto itself) f, such that there exist indices i,j such that f(ai) = aj, f(aj) = ai and f(ak) = ak for all other indices k. This is often denoted (in the cycle notation) as (a,b).

For example, if X = {a,b,c,d,e}, the function σ given by

\begin{matrix} \sigma(a)&=&a\\ \sigma(b)&=&e\\ \sigma(c)&=&c\\ \sigma(d)&=&d\\ \sigma(e)&=&b \end{matrix}

is a transposition.

Any permutation can be expressed as the composition (product) of transpositions. One of the main results on symmetric groups states that either all of the decompositions of a given permutation into transpositions have an even number of transpositions, or they all have an odd number of transpositions.

External links

See also

This article incorporates material from transposition on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the GFDL.

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